Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Death penalty for Canadian escalates China-Canada tensions

-

TORONTO — A Chinese court sentenced a Canadian man to death on Monday in a sudden retrial of a drug smuggling case, and Beijing said that it has denied a Canadian diplomatic immunity, ratcheting up tensions since Canada’s arrest of a top Chinese technology executive last month.

A Chinese court in northeaste­rn Liaoning province announced that it had given Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg the death penalty, reversing an earlier 2016 ruling that sentenced him to 15 years in prison.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau strongly condemned Monday’s proceeding, suggesting that China was using its judicial system to pressure Canada over the arrest of Meng Wanzhou, chief financial officer of the Chinese telecommun­ications giant Huawei.

In his strongest comments yet, Mr. Trudeau said “all countries around the world” should be concerned that Beijing is acting arbitraril­y with its justice system.

“It is of extreme concern to us as a government, as it should be to all our internatio­nal friends and allies, that China has chosen to begin to arbitraril­y apply a death penalty,” Mr. Trudeau said.

Canada later updated its travel advisory for China to warn Canadians of “the risk of arbitrary enforcemen­t of local laws.”

Further escalating the diplomatic rift between the two countries, a Chinese spokeswoma­n said earlier Monday that Michael Kovrig, a former Canadian diplomat taken into custody in apparent retaliatio­n for Ms. Meng’s arrest, was not eligible for diplomatic immunity as Mr. Trudeau has maintained.

A senior Canadian government official said Chinese officials have been questionin­g Mr. Kovrig about his diplomatic work in China, which is a major reason Mr. Trudeau is asserting diplomatic immunity. The official, who was not authorized to comment publicly about the case, spoke on condition of anonymity.

Mr. Kovrig, a Northeast Asia analyst for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group think tank, was on a leave of absence from the Canadian government at the time of his arrest last month.

Schellenbe­rg was detained more than four years ago and initially sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2016. But within weeks of Ms. Meng’s Dec. 1 arrest an appeals court suddenly reversed that decision, saying the sentence was too lenient, and scheduled Monday’s retrial with just four days’ notice.

The court gave no indication that the death penalty could be commuted, but observers said Schellenbe­rg’s fate is likely to be drawn into diplomatic negotiatio­ns over China’s demand for the release of Ms. Meng.

“Playing hostage politics, China rushes the retrial of a Canadian suspect and sentences him to death in a fairly transparen­t attempt to pressure Canada to free the Huawei CFO,” Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth said in a tweet.

The Chinese media began publicizin­g Schellenbe­rg’s case after Canada’s detention of Ms. Meng, the daughter of Huawei’s founder, at the request of the United States, which wants her extradited to face charges that she committed fraud by misleading banks about the company’s business dealings in Iran.

Days after Ms. Meng’s arrest, Mr. Kovrig and Canadian businessma­n Michael Spavor were detained on vague national security allegation­s. Ms. Meng is out on bail in Canada awaiting extraditio­n proceeding­s that begin next month.

Schellenbe­rg’s lawyer, Zhang Dongshuo, said prosecutor­s had not introduced new evidence to justify a heavier sentence during the one-day trial, during which Schellenbe­rg again maintained his innocence. He said his client now has 10 days to appeal.

 ?? Intermedia­te Peoples' Court of Dalian/AFP/Getty Images ?? Canadian Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg, center, during his retrial on drug traffickin­g charges in China.
Intermedia­te Peoples' Court of Dalian/AFP/Getty Images Canadian Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg, center, during his retrial on drug traffickin­g charges in China.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States